If an interval corresponds to a set of points (and nothing else) then I agree that an interval containing only rationals has no length.The length of that union is zero, if the intervals are restricted to rationals. Do you agree with that point? — fishfry
Our problem is that you are only allowing points in your sets. Suppose I introduce a new concept called 'k-interval' to define the set of ANY objects located between an upper and lower boundary. Would you then consider allowing objects other than points into the set?No points. So they're all the empty set? I'm not supposed to push back on this? — fishfry
I wanted to show you that even if I cut my unit line to contain all rational points between 0 and 1 that there would still be stuff in between the points -- continua. Perhaps I used the wrong tactic by talking about an idea which I don't support. I did say at the start of the paragraph that it was impossible but maybe I could have been clearer.Why on earth do you troll me into arguing with your points, then admitting that you agree with me in the first place? — fishfry
Yes, you believe in continua, but not as 'objects in and of themselves'. You believe that continua can't exist in the absence of points. Please confirm.I very much believe in the continuum, which is pretty well modeled by the standard real numbers. — fishfry
My preference is that you accept non-points into sets, however, if you're unwilling to do that then here's an alternate approach. To move this conversation forward, let's say that when I say 'a line', you can think to yourself that I'm referring to 2^aleph_0 points (which somehow assemble to form a line), and I'll think to myself that I'm simply referring to a line (which cannot be constructed from points). In other words, you can go on thinking that points are fundamental and I'll go on thinking that lines are fundamental. How does that sound to you? All I need from you really is to allow me to restrict my intervals to those whose bounds are rational (or +/- infinity). Could you let that fly? ...Just to see how far my position can go in the absence of the explicit use real numbers (I'm fine if in your eyes their use is implied but I just won't ever mention them)...I am at an utter loss as to what you have been getting at all this time. Can you get to the bottom line on all this? So far I get that your "continua" are either empty or have length 0. Or that they somehow have length 1, despite being composed of only rationals. — fishfry
You’re suggesting that my line, which already extends in space, requires additional points, which themselves individually have no length, to actually have length. I wish you could appreciate the irony in your position. — keystone
If an interval corresponds to a set of points (and nothing else) then I agree that an interval containing only rationals has no length. — keystone
Our problem is that you are only allowing points in your sets. — keystone
Suppose I introduce a new concept called 'k-interval' to define the set of ANY objects located between an upper and lower boundary. Would you then consider allowing objects other than points into the set? — keystone
Why on earth do you troll me into arguing with your points, then admitting that you agree with me in the first place?
— fishfry
I wanted to show you that even if I cut my unit line to contain all rational points between 0 and 1 that there would still be stuff in between the points -- continua. Perhaps I used the wrong tactic by talking about an idea which I don't support. I did say at the start of the paragraph that it was impossible but maybe I could have been clearer. — keystone
Yes, you believe in continua, but not as 'objects in and of themselves'. You believe that continua can't exist in the absence of points. Please confirm. — keystone
My preference is that you accept non-points into sets, — keystone
however, if you're unwilling to do that then here's an alternate approach. To move this conversation forward, let's say that when I say 'a line', you can think to yourself that I'm referring to 2^aleph_0 points — keystone
(which somehow assemble to form a line), and I'll think to myself that I'm simply referring to a line (which cannot be constructed from points). — keystone
In other words, you can go on thinking that points are fundamental and I'll go on thinking that lines are fundamental. How does that sound to you? — keystone
All I need from you really is to allow me to restrict my intervals to those whose bounds are rational (or +/- infinity). Could you let that fly? — keystone
...Just to see how far my position can go in the absence of the explicit use real numbers (I'm fine if in your eyes their use is implied but I just won't ever mention them)... — keystone
So for example, can you allow me to say that there are 5 objects depicted below? You can go on thinking that 2 of the objects are composite objects and I'll go on thinking that all 5 objects are fundamental (they're either 0D or 1D continua). — keystone
No, I'm saying that within an open interval, such as (0,0.5), lies a single objects: a line. Absolutely no points exist with that interval. If you say that 0.25 lies in the middle of that interval, I will say no, 0.25 lies between (0,0.25) and (0.25, 0.5). And what this amounts to is cutting (0,0.5) such that it no longer exists anymore. In its place I have (0,0.25) U [0.25] U (0.25,0.5).But you are the one saying that you only have rationals. — fishfry
Let's move away from directly using sets to describe the path. Instead, we'll describe the path using a graph, and then define the graph with a set.In standard set theory, the only thing that sets can contain is other sets. We can call them points but that's only a word used to convey geometric intuition. Actually sets don't contain points, they contain other sets. — fishfry
Urelements are indivisible 'atoms'. The lines that I'm working with are divisible.I don't know anything about set theory with urlements. — fishfry
That is not what I believe. I can define a line using no rationals: (-inf,+inf). I see this line as a single object (a line). It is not populated by rational points. It is not populated by any points for that matter. I've drawn it for you below in between points at -inf and +inf. To walk this path from -inf to +inf you don't need limits, you just walk the corresponding graph from vertex 0 to vertex 1 to vertex 2.You only believe in rationals. Where are you getting these things? — fishfry
Yes, I mean endpoints. I used the term 'bounds' because it is a more general term that applies to higher dimensional analogues. I'm searching for a way to keep this conversation going so it doesn't end prematurely out of frustration. Currently, I don't believe I can persuade you that a continuum can exist without points. However, I've come to realize that convincing you of this isn't necessary. Here’s my new approach:By bounds you mean endpoints? So now you are backing off entirely from your last half dozen points, and saying that your ontology consists of intervals with rational endpoints. But the real numbers are indeed present inside the intervals after all? Is that what you are saying? — fishfry
Yes, the endpoints are rational, and the object between any pair of endpoints is simply a line. It doesn't go deeper than that. I understand you see that line as a composite object consisting of 2^aleph_0 points. However, I view the line as a primitive object. Clearly, our starting points differ. To move the discussion forward, could we agree to a compromise where we refer to a line as a "composite" object? This way, by including composite it's evident that I recognize your perspective, but the quotes indicate that my viewpoint doesn't necessitate this classification.But now only the endpoints are rational, leaving me baffled as to what those objects are. — fishfry
I agree with this point. The issue has been the lack of viable alternatives. I see that Peirce was suggesting the use of infinitesimals, and you're aware of my stance on those—the one from the comment where you thought I was just trolling.A forum member once pointed me to the ideas of Charles Sanders Peirce (correct spelling) who said that the mathematical idea of a continuum could not be right, since a true continuum could not be broken up into individual points as the real numbers can. — fishfry
But you are the one saying that you only have rationals.
— fishfry
No, I'm saying that within an open interval, such as (0,0.5), lies a single objects: a line. Absolutely no points exist with that interval. If you say that 0.25 lies in the middle of that interval, I will say no, 0.25 lies between (0,0.25) and (0.25, 0.5). And what this amounts to is cutting (0,0.5) such that it no longer exists anymore. In its place I have (0,0.25) U [0.25] U (0.25,0.5). — keystone
Let's move away from directly using sets to describe the path. Instead, we'll describe the path using a graph, and then define the graph with a set. — keystone
I don't know anything about set theory with urlements.
— fishfry
Urelements are indivisible 'atoms'. The lines that I'm working with are divisible. — keystone
You only believe in rationals. Where are you getting these things?
— fishfry
That is not what I believe. I can define a line using no rationals: (-inf,+inf). — keystone
I see this line as a single object (a line). — keystone
It is not populated by rational points. It is not populated by any points for that matter. — keystone
I've drawn it for you below in between points at -inf and +inf. To walk this path from -inf to +inf you don't need limits, you just walk the corresponding graph from vertex 0 to vertex 1 to vertex 2. — keystone
You would call this green line the 'real number line'. You see this as 2^aleph_0 points. You believe that to walk any length on this green line you need limits. I understand what you're saying. We're just starting from different starting points. You're starting from the bottom and I'm starting from the top. — keystone
Yes, I mean endpoints. I used the term 'bounds' because it is a more general term that applies to higher dimensional analogues. I'm searching for a way to keep this conversation going so it doesn't end prematurely out of frustration. — keystone
Currently, I don't believe I can persuade you that a continuum can exist without points. — keystone
However, I've come to realize that convincing you of this isn't necessary. Here’s my new approach:
1) Start at the bottom
2) Build up to the top
3) 'Start' at the top
4) Approach the 'bottom' from the top — keystone
I see this equivalent to starting at the bottom of the S-B tree -> working our way to the top of the tree -> then proceeding back down to approach the bottom. I know you won't see it that way, which is fine. But to be clear, I still believe things are very ugly at the bottom filled with pumpkins. Nevertheless I do understand how mathematicians think things work at the bottom and if starting at the bottom is the only way you'll allow me to get to the top then I'll go with it. I understand your criticisms of starting at the top, I just don't accept them. Once you allow me to get to (3) I endeavor to show you that (3) and (4) alone fully satisfy our needs and if I'm careful (e.g. by only allowing for rational endpoints) that (1) and (2) are not only superfluous but undesirable. Is that a fair approach? — keystone
But now only the endpoints are rational, leaving me baffled as to what those objects are.
— fishfry
Yes, the endpoints are rational, — keystone
and the object between any pair of endpoints is simply a line. — keystone
It doesn't go deeper than that. I understand you see that line as a composite object consisting of 2^aleph_0 points. — keystone
However, I view the line as a primitive object. — keystone
Clearly, our starting points differ. To move the discussion forward, could we agree to a compromise where we refer to a line as a "composite" object? This way, by including composite it's evident that I recognize your perspective, but the quotes indicate that my viewpoint doesn't necessitate this classification. — keystone
A forum member once pointed me to the ideas of Charles Sanders Peirce (correct spelling) who said that the mathematical idea of a continuum could not be right, since a true continuum could not be broken up into individual points as the real numbers can.
— fishfry
I agree with this point. The issue has been the lack of viable alternatives. I see that Peirce was suggesting the use of infinitesimals, and you're aware of my stance on those—the one from the comment where you thought I was just trolling. — keystone
Yes!!! I agree with Euclid's definition of lines and points. I appreciate that he provides foundational definitions of both as separate, fundamental entities. Thanks for pointing this out.unless you mean the original line of Euclid, "A line is breadthless length." — fishfry
Euclid also said that "The ends of a line are points." When I describe a path as 0 U (0,1) U 1:What is a line? What does the notation [0, 0.5] mean? — fishfry
I believe that someone even as intelligent and knowledgeable as yourself is not qualified to discuss the bottom-up philosophy of a continuum because it is flawed. I'm 100% certain you have the capacity to understand, discuss, and criticize the top-down philosophy.I'm not qualified to discuss the philosophy of the continuum with you, except as it relates to the standard mathematical real numbers. — fishfry
You're right, I did say that the endpoints were necessarily rational numbers. (-inf, +inf) has no endpoints. While there are scenarios where it is useful to include points at infinity, for this discussion, let's agree that the points at -inf and +inf are not real points. I'm only using infinity as a shorthand. I should have been clearer.That directly contradicts what you said earlier. — fishfry
unless you mean the original line of Euclid, "A line is breadthless length."
— fishfry
Yes!!! I agree with Euclid's definition of lines and points. I appreciate that he provides foundational definitions of both as separate, fundamental entities. Thanks for pointing this out. — keystone
What is a line? What does the notation [0, 0.5] mean?
— fishfry
Euclid also said that "The ends of a line are points." When I describe a path as 0 U (0,1) U 1:
(0,1) corresponds to the object of breadthless length and
0 and 1 correspond to the points at the end. — keystone
It seems that some people intepret Euclid as saying that a line without endpoints extends to infinity. I do not think this is necessarily the case. While (-inf,+inf) is a valid line, I believe (0,1) is also a valid line in and of itself. — keystone
Please give the following figure a chance as it captures a lot of what I'm trying to say: — keystone
I believe that someone even as intelligent and knowledgeable as yourself is not qualified to discuss the bottom-up philosophy of a continuum because it is flawed. — keystone
I'm 100% certain you have the capacity to understand, discuss, and criticize the top-down philosophy. — keystone
You're right, I did say that the endpoints were necessarily rational numbers. (-inf, +inf) has no endpoints. While there are scenarios where it is useful to include points at infinity, for this discussion, let's agree that the points at -inf and +inf are not real points. I'm only using infinity as a shorthand. I should have been clearer. — keystone
Didn't I ask you about this several posts ago? Ok, Euclid's line. — fishfry
And by the way, what is this "+" symbol? Have you defined it? Is this the standard + of the rational numbers? — fishfry
what does the notation (0,1) mean? — fishfry
Since your intervals are entirely made up of rationals, the total length must be 0. Where is the extra length coming from? — fishfry
I'm lost and dispirited. It's not my role in life to feel bad about myself for endlessly sniping at your heartfelt ideas. — fishfry
You correctly note that the sum of the lengths of the points is 0. But then you say that the sum of the lengths is 1, and I'm not sure how that follows. — fishfry
Didn't I ask you about this several posts ago? Ok, Euclid's line.
— fishfry
Sorry, I didn't appreciate the point when you first mentioned it. Yes, I'm starting from classical Euclidean geometry. — keystone
And by the way, what is this "+" symbol? Have you defined it? Is this the standard + of the rational numbers?
— fishfry
Yes. Formally the arithmetic is performed as described here (https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1570866706000311) — keystone
but informally it's performed using the standard method we teach kids. The formal and informal results are equivalent. — keystone
what does the notation (0,1) mean?
— fishfry
uu
It describes the line's potential. — keystone
I'm going to provide a shorthand answer involving real numbers that I don't want you to take literally. If this explanation lands, great, otherwise forget it.
No points exist on lines, including the unit line (0,1). To put it another way, there are no 'actual points' present on that segment. (Actual vs. potential is discussed below).
Cutting line (0,1) in two will introduce an 'actual point' between the two resulting line segments. That point will have a rational coordinate between 0 and 1. — keystone
In my last post, I noted that -inf and +inf are not 'actual points' but rather are used as helpful shorthand. I should have called them 'potential points'.
With a similar shorthand, we can say that on line (0,1) exist 2ℵ0
2
ℵ
0
'potential points', which have real number coordinates between 0 and 1. — keystone
The rational 'potential points' can become 'actual points' through cuts.
The irrational 'potential points' are permanently confined to their 'potential point' status.
I want to reiterate that 'potential points' don't actually exist. They're just a fiction that may help us comprehend the potential in continua. If you don't think potential points are a useful concept we can just drop.
The interval "(0,1)" describes the potential of the corresponding unit line. — keystone
Since your intervals are entirely made up of rationals, the total length must be 0. Where is the extra length coming from?
— fishfry
The length of a line comes from its potential. — keystone
Sometimes it’s a bit frustrating when my explanations don’t connect, but this conversation is exactly what I need right now, so please don’t feel bad. I'm very appreciative that you've stuck around. — keystone
Path Length = Length of Lines + Length of Points
Path Length = Length of Lines + 0
Path Length = Length of Lines
So referring to row 3 of that figure...
Path Length = Length of Lines
1 = 1/2 + 1/4 + 1/4 — keystone
I'll stipulate to your non-rigorous conception of a continuum of being made of tiny little continua "all the way down," with no need for actual points, if that's your idea. I think this is what Peirce is getting at. — fishfry
The line contains a frothing sea of tiny little micro-continua that are not points. Is that about right? — fishfry
Well here you are in trouble. If you allow "cuts" then à la Dedekind we have the real numbers. But you don't want to go there so ok. There are cuts but not so many as to allow the reals. — fishfry
Of course all mathematical entities are fictional, so I can't see what the difference is between and actual and a fictional point. — fishfry
You are saying the exact same thing, but changing the name of irrationals to "fictionals." I don't see how that changes anything. You just changed their name but they're the same irrationals. — fishfry
How do you propose to pass from a finite line to a circle, say? If you are considering topological transformations, how can you express them? Sorry for butting in, but I remain curious. — jgill
I also think that's what Peirce was getting but that's definitely not what I'm getting at. Remember when I "trolled" you by introducing a scenario involving infinitesmals? I believe that approach aligns with Peirce's thinking and I believe it's wrong. — keystone
You keep trying to concieve of my line as something built from smaller more fundamental elements (before points, now infinitesimals). It is not built from anything. (0,1) is one object - a line. The smaller elements emerge from the line, not the other way around. — keystone
I'm not allowing a single real number. We can partition the S-B tree at a rational node (e.g. 1/2), but we cannot partition it at a real node (because real nodes don't exist). — keystone
Just as you don't grant infinity actual status as a natural number, — keystone
I don't grant irrational points actual status as points. After all, infinity and irrational points are inseparably linked in the S-B tree, since irrational points become actual points at row infinity. If there is no actual row infinity, there are no actual irrational points. — keystone
The difference is that you believe individual irrationals can be isolated, whereas I think we can only access irrationals as continuous bundles of 2ℵ0 — keystone
fictional points. A mathematical 'quanta' if you will. In a 1D context, I refer to this continuous bundle as a line. And if we cut a line, we have two lines (i.e. two bundles of 2ℵ0 — keystone
fictional points). No matter how many times we cut it, we will never reduce a bundle down into individual points. — keystone
Since we can only ever interact with these bundles, it is meaningless to discuss individual irrationals - they are fictions. The bundles are not. Do you see the distinction? — keystone
Throughout our conversation, my perspective and how I express it have greatly developed, leading me to believe it's best to reformulate and clarify my position. I'll be on a short holiday for the next few days, and I'd also like to take the necessary time to gather my thoughts before responding. For now, let me make two points:
The essence of my perspective (top-down) remains the same, although it requires some minor adjustments.
Having to reformulate my view underscores the significant value I've derived from our conversation—thanks once more!
I'll reach out again in a few days. I look forward to continuing this discussion. Enjoy your weekend! — keystone
Please allow me to refine and restate my position on reals.
Grandi's series has no sum but it should be 1/2. — keystone
Analogously, I believe a line is not made of points but it should be made of 2ℵ0
2
ℵ
0
points. — keystone
Analogously, I believe a line is not modeled by numbers but it should be modeled by the real numbers. — keystone
Just as Grandi's series only sums to 1/2 in a very particular light, — keystone
my view amounts to the belief that there is great mathematical value in irrationals, but that they only make sense in a very particular light - when considered collectively as bundles, rather than individual, isolated points. — keystone
This is the essence of the top-down view where we start with such a bundle of 2^aleph_0 points - a line in this case - and then we make cuts to selectively isolate segments of this line. I refer to any point nested within such a bundle, as opposed to being isolated, as a potential point. — keystone
Revisiting the analogy above, when I utilize an interval to describe a range, I am referring to the underlying and singular continuous line between the endpoints, which should correspond to the set of real numbered points contained within these endpoints. — keystone
I believe performing an arbitrarily small 1D cut around φ — keystone
What do you think? — keystone
I agree that it lacks a sum, but do you think that terms like Cesàro summation and Ramanujan summation are completely misnomers? Do you truly think that there's no meaningful way to assign a value of 1/2 to that divergent series? I'm taken aback by this, though perhaps debating Grandi's series is merely a distraction.Why on earth would you think that? It clearly has no sum, since the sequence of partial sums has no limit. — fishfry
I think there's a bit of confusion around what I mean by "bundle." Let me explain using an analogy. GULP. Consider a fitness membership that includes access to cardio equipment, swimming pools, sauna rooms, group classes, and more. When you join the club, you pay a single price for this all-inclusive membership bundle. This means one price covers numerous amenities. There isn’t a separate charge for the sauna or the swimming pools. However, there should ideally be underlying individual prices, right? Like, when setting the bundle price, the gym owner should have calculated costs for each component. But what should have been done doesn't necessarily reflect what is—a single price for the entire bundle.Needs explanation. — fishfry
Dedekind cuts have perfect precision. I claim that the best we can do is plan to cut an arbitrarily narrow line surrounding an irrational number. Cuts are used to decompose the bundle. Initially, the bundle price for the membership is established, and it's only afterwards that we attempt to deconstruct it into an itemized price list. Itemizing a membership can become an endless endeavor, breaking the price down into increasingly smaller fragments—from the cost of each toilet to each square of toilet paper, and even down to the cost of each atom in that toilet paper. Attempting to detail a gym membership to such minute components is a fool's errand. The same goes for breaking a line into individual points.Cuts as in Dedekind cuts? If you already have continuum-many points, why do you need cuts? — fishfry
The process of making cuts involves two distinct phases: (1) planning the cut and (2) executing the cut.I don't know what an "arbitrarily small cut] means. It conflicts with your previous use of cut. — fishfry
I agree that it lacks a sum, but do you think that terms like Cesàro summation and Ramanujan summation are completely misnomers? — keystone
Do you truly think that there's no meaningful way to assign a value of 1/2 to that divergent series? — keystone
I'm taken aback by this, — keystone
though perhaps debating Grandi's series is merely a distraction. — keystone
I think there's a bit of confusion around what I mean by "bundle." — keystone
Let me explain using an analogy. GULP. Consider a fitness membership that includes access to cardio equipment, swimming pools, sauna rooms, group classes, and more. When you join the club, you pay a single price for this all-inclusive membership bundle. This means one price covers numerous amenities. There isn’t a separate charge for the sauna or the swimming pools. However, there should ideally be underlying individual prices, right? Like, when setting the bundle price, the gym owner should have calculated costs for each component. But what should have been done doesn't necessarily reflect what is—a single price for the entire bundle. — keystone
Similarly, in my scenario, the bundle of interest (a line) is represented simply as (0,2). Just as there's no itemized pricing for each gym amenity, there's no infinite set detailing every coordinate on the line. — keystone
Dedekind cuts have perfect precision. I claim that the best we can do is plan to cut an arbitrarily narrow line surrounding an irrational number. — keystone
Cuts are used to decompose the bundle. Initially, the bundle price for the membership is established, and it's only afterwards that we attempt to deconstruct it into an itemized price list. Itemizing a membership can become an endless endeavor, breaking the price down into increasingly smaller fragments—from the cost of each toilet to each square of toilet paper, and even down to the cost of each atom in that toilet paper. Attempting to detail a gym membership to such minute components is a fool's errand. The same goes for breaking a line into individual points. — keystone
I don't know what an "arbitrarily small cut] means. It conflicts with your previous use of cut.
— fishfry
The process of making cuts involves two distinct phases: (1) planning the cut and (2) executing the cut. — keystone
(1) We can devise a perfect plan. During the planning phase, we don’t commit to specific values for epsilon; we only recognize that it can be arbitrarily small. This stage is the realm of mathematicians.
(2) Conversely, executing the cut requires selecting specific values for epsilon, which inevitably introduces some imprecision. Applied mathematicians handle the execution, often employing approximate values for irrationals like pi, such as 3.14. — keystone
While this approach might seem dirty, it's also quick, and this has allowed applied mathematicians to significantly improve the world. — keystone
You’re correct that previously, I was focused on the execution, but I've realized that the planning phase is indeed more critical for this discussion. — keystone
I think they are chainsaws, not to be trifled with by the untrained masses. — fishfry
There are fiber bundles in math. A hairbrush with bristles sticking out is a fiber bundle. Off topic but reminded me of the name. — fishfry
Ok, it's an aggregate price where the components haven't necessarily been priced. So you have aggregate lengths, but no individual ones. Something like that? — fishfry
I honestly think that what you are doing is coming to understand, in your own way, the nature of the real numbers. — fishfry
Well sure, every irrational can be identified with a descending sequence of open intervals. I can locate pi in the sequence (3, 4), (3.1, 3.2), (3.14, 3.15), (3.141, 3.142), ... I mean that the sequence itself IS the number pi... Does that idea resonate with you? — fishfry
You just have an ... ahem ... irrational prejudice against irrational numbers. — fishfry
I'm with you descending down to points via sequences of open intervals. — fishfry
And if you don't believe pi is really there, then no problem. You just define pi as the sequence of nested open intervals and you've got an object that, if it's not the "real" pi, is just as good. — fishfry
This bit about planning and execution is a little off the mark. In math when we conceive a thing it's automatically done. Would that the rest of the world were so simple! — fishfry
Does the world seem improved to you? — fishfry
I think they are chainsaws, not to be trifled with by the untrained masses.
— fishfry
This sounds a lot like gatekeeping. — keystone
Cesàro summations are very simple. Nevertheless, let's set aside Grandi's series for now. It doesn't have any relevance to my position...until further on. — keystone
There are fiber bundles in math. A hairbrush with bristles sticking out is a fiber bundle. Off topic but reminded me of the name.
— fishfry
Wow, I feel like a generation alpha kid trying to come up with an email address - all the good names are already taken! — keystone
Anyway, I'd actually rather call the bundles 'quanta', but to avoid QM-washing this discussion I'll keep calling them bundles. — keystone
Further. bundles have interval descriptions but individual points (within a bundle) do not. In other words, the bundle is the fundamental unit. Sure, we can perform a cut actualize a 0D bundle, such as [0.5,0.5], but that point is emergent. — keystone
I don’t believe that’s the case. It seems there are three factors involved here. (1) I'm refining my ideas—thank you for your assistance with this. (2) I'm improving how I communicate my ideas—again, thanks for your help. (3) You are starting to understand that my perspective doesn’t undermine any established mathematics; it mainly reinterprets it (making bundles fundamental). — keystone
Well sure, every irrational can be identified with a descending sequence of open intervals. I can locate pi in the sequence (3, 4), (3.1, 3.2), (3.14, 3.15), (3.141, 3.142), ... I mean that the sequence itself IS the number pi... Does that idea resonate with you?
— fishfry
ABSOLUTELY (except for the underlined part). — keystone
I did note this 2 days ago when I said that 1D cuts around φ are more true to the Cauchy definition of φ than 0D cuts. I also chose the golden ratio in that message because it has a beautiful description using the SB-algorithm. — keystone
Look at the figure below. — keystone
I've never denied the significance of irrationals. My view is simply that because irrationals are always encompassed within bundles, or rather are the bundles themselves, they differ distinctly from isolated points/rational numbers. — keystone
Wait, I'm not proposing that an irrational is a descent down to a point. Rather, I'm proposing that irrationals are infinite descents involving arbitrarily smaller intervals. — keystone
The interval never has a length of 0 whereby a single irrational point is isolated. — keystone
Ah, okay, so you don't require a point at pi. Awesome. It seems like we're making progress. — keystone
Once we're completely aligned, I'd like to explore what I believe are the unseen and surprising consequences of this perspective with you. — keystone
Distinguishing between planning and execution is paramount. The inability to differentiate between them is precisely why there are so many infinity cranks. Cranks reject the concept of completing a supertask. — keystone
On the other hand, mathematicians refuse to reject supertasks (or ideas implicitly associated with them) because they carry profound aesthetic and practical value. — keystone
I find myself in the middle ground. What I suggest is that mathematicians would find complete satisfaction in merely planning the supertask, without concerning themselves with the imperfections of its incomplete execution. — keystone
There’s a lot wrong with the world today, but would you really want to live an Amish or Mennonite lifestyle? — keystone
Personally, I appreciate living in the most interesting of times, despite the uncertainty of our future. — keystone
Bundles is is. Should I think of them as tiny little wriggly micro-continua? ... Ok, You have all the intervals, but no individual points. — fishfry
I'm trying to clarify ideas about mathematics, and trying to frame your ideas in the context of what's already known about mathematics. — fishfry
Nothing showed up underlined so I don't know what you are referring to. But if you agree that a descending stack of intervals can be taken as the definition of a point, that's a major agreement between us. — fishfry
What, now you believe in irrationals? You know the S-B tree is not the only kind of tree structure that represents the real numbers. I don't know why you are fixated on it. — fishfry
Well, irrationals are downward nested stacks of intervals. That's the next best thing. Can we agree on that? — fishfry
But ... so are the rationals [downward nested stacks of intervals]! Right? — fishfry
But if you mean that a point has length 0, and an interval has a positive length, the unsigned difference of its endpoints, we agree. — fishfry
Mathematicians in general have no interest in supertasks. They're mainly a curiosity for the computer scientists as I understand it. — fishfry
I don't believe I'd take well to getting up at 5am to milk the bull. — fishfry
I like the modern world, but I don't think that applied mathematicians are universally engaged in creating good. — fishfry
You persist in searching for an infinite set made up of tiny fundamental building blocks to assemble, like a mosaic. This bottom-up approach colors your perspective, but it's not feasible to represent the interval (0,1) as a union of such micro-continua—it simply doesn't work. I am seeking a construction that, at least theoretically, could be explicitly written down. — keystone
In contrast, a top-down approach begins with a singleton set that includes a large fundamental bundle to trim, like a sculpture. Each cut can split it into finitely more, smaller bundles. Although we can continue making cuts indefinitely, there is no necessity to complete a supertask and produce an infinite set of tiny micro-continua. Our strategy only needs to involve a finite number of cuts to produce the necessary elements for the computation at hand. Why do you believe it's necessary to have all the intervals? — keystone
Oops, I meant to edit the quote as follows with the underlined part being the part I disagree with: "I mean that the sequence itself IS the number pi". — keystone
In our discussion, I've always acknowledged the value and beauty of irrationals. However, I believe they don't share the same status as rational numbers. — keystone
Rationals correspond to singleton intervals and represent specific points, whereas irrationals correspond to non-degenerate intervals and represent lines, albeit arbitrarily small ones. You're correct, the S-B tree isn't fundamental to my perspective. — keystone
Yes, but let me qualify my position as I think we will disagree on some details. We can execute cuts to isolate rationals within singleton intervals. We can plan to isolate computable irrationals within arbitrarily small intervals. However, even that plan alone is not feasible for non-computable irrationals. — keystone
The best we could plan for is to isolate non-computable irrationals within a finite length interval. I hold this view because any plan we devise must, at least theoretically, be expressible in a finite number of characters. — keystone
Besides, why would we even need to isolate non-computables? They're social creatures that like to live in large communities. — keystone
No, I view rationals as singleton intervals. — keystone
I can devise a plan to target an irrational whose midpoint is arbitrarily close to a rational, but when I actually execute the cut, I must choose a positive epsilon value, and the resulting distance between the point and the resulting line segment's midpoint will necessarily be non-zero. It is for reasons like this why it is critical to distinguish between the plan and the execution of the plan. With the top-down view, there is an inherent approximation in the act of executing a plan - a principle analogous to the Uncertainty Principle in QM. — keystone
But if you mean that a point has length 0, and an interval has a positive length, the unsigned difference of its endpoints, we agree.
— fishfry
Excellent. This is a crucial point that I will revisit as we continue our discussion. — keystone
I acknowledge that most mathematicians are Platonists and therefore see no necessity for supertasks. — keystone
However, constructivist (and people like me) needs supertasks to arrive at the objects that Platonists consider to exist. — keystone
The nested interval construction can be explicitly written down. I perhaps am not sharing your vision here. — fishfry
Finitely many cuts won't get you enough of the points. Your continuum will be full of holes. The set of real numbers approximable by finite sequences is only countably infinite. — fishfry
The sequence is defined as pi. And thereafter, it might as well be taken for pi since, by suitably defining arithmetic on the set of sequence stacks, it will have all the required properties of pi. — fishfry
The reals are logically constructed from the rationals. If you have the rationals you get the reals for free. — fishfry
You haven't mentioned algorithms — fishfry
But now you're saying that just because you can't express something, it doesn't exist. — fishfry
Well, some of them can be isolated, if by that you mean defined. Most can't. — fishfry
Yes. Agreed. But they can ALSO be taken to be nested stacks. And then there is no difference in status between the rationals and the irrationals. — fishfry
If that's true, then you are saying that supertasks are a formalism or a concept that let you reproduce standard math, while pretending that you reject parts of standard math. — fishfry
I can write (0,1) as the union of arbitrarily many intervals. However, I cannot write (0,1) as the union of infinitely many intervals. — keystone
For example, consider describing (0,1) as the union of N equal-length non-degenerate intervals (plus a bunch of points).
Length of (0,1) = Length of each interval * number of intervals
Length of (0,1) = (1/N) * N
This equation is valid when N is any positive natural number, but it is not valid when N is infinity. — keystone
Therefore, it is not sensible to define the interval (0,1) as the union of infinitely many intervals. — keystone
And what I'm saying is that since we have to pick a finite number, why not just pick N=1? — keystone
I don't have to cut (0,1) at all to give it length. All 2ℵ0
2
ℵ
0
points that you are looking for are there from the start, albeit bundled together in one single object. Cuts don't create length, all they do is divide length. — keystone
We can sensibly devise a plan for arithmetic on rationals, AND we can completely execute arithmetic on rationals.
We can sensibly devise a plan for arithmetic on irrationals, but we cannot completely execute arithmetic on irrationals.
There is a distinction here that gets lost when you give rationals and irrationals the same status. — keystone
Nothing is for free, not even the rationals. When I start with path (−∞,+∞)
(
−
∞
,
+
∞
)
I have no numbers. Instead I have 2ℵ0
2
ℵ
0
points bundled together in a single object. Again, with the fitness membership bundle, there's not a price for every atom (or rather every point) in the gym. There's just a price for the bundle. We don't get the price per point for free. What would that price even be - seriously? $0/point? A bottom-up pricing model is absolute nonsen — keystone
What is a plan if not a form of algorithm? — keystone
I'm not suggesting that non-computable points don't exist within the (0,1) bundle; rather, I'm saying it's impossible to isolate such points. — keystone
Humans have never isolated a non-computable point and never will — keystone
—it's simply unfeasible to come up with a plan to do so. It seems almost as if you're adopting a stance based on faith. But why? What is the need to isolate non-computable points? — keystone
I'm not referring to a verbal description, but rather to isolating it using cuts. For instance, you might attempt to pinpoint Chaitin's number within the interval (0.007, 0.008) for a specific Turing machine. However, this interval has a finite length of 0.001. It is not feasible to devise a plan to successively refine these intervals to confine Chaitin's number within an arbitrarily narrow range. — keystone
A point can never be perfectly represented using a line, no matter how small that line is. — keystone
I see (0,1) as a bundle of 2ℵ0
2
ℵ
0
points. You see (0,1) as 2ℵ0
2
ℵ
0
isolated points. — keystone
cuts. I need to absolutely mince that line until it's made of individual objects that have no length. This requires a supertask. It's not possible. It's not sensical. — keystone
(0,1) is the union of (1/n, 1 - 1/n) as n goes to infinity. I just wrote (0,1) as the union of infinitely many open intervals. — fishfry
Plans are far more general than algorithms...Chaitin's Omega is one such noncomputable number that can be specifically defined. — fishfry
You're right that most of the noncomputables have no unique definition and can't be "isolated," but so what? — fishfry
A point can never be perfectly represented using a line, no matter how small that line is. — keystone
Did I say the contrary? I don't recall doing that. — fishfry
No real numbers are isolated. — fishfry
Whatever. This is depressing me a bit. I no longer know what we're talking about. — fishfry
(0,1) is the union of (1/n, 1 - 1/n) as n goes to infinity. I just wrote (0,1) as the union of infinitely many open intervals.
— fishfry
Based on your description:
n=1 (1,0)
n=2 (1/2,1/2)
n=3 (1/3,2/3)
etc.
I don't follow. What exactly are you combining into a union? — keystone
I've summarized key aspects of my argument in the following table, where I provide two analogous examples (a fitness gym vs. a path). Can you please tell me which cells in the table you disagree with or do not understand? This will help us identify the confusion and hopefully advance the conversation. You don't have to read the column for the fitness gym. I've only included it to ensure that our thinking is grounded in reality. — keystone
My argument is that the top-down perspective lays equal claim to the irrational points. You can't claim that there are gaps in my intervals just because the non-computable irrational points in my view do not have corresponding numbers. Both of our views of a line involve the exact same 2ℵ0
2
ℵ
0
points. The difference is that my points are bundled together as a single package (thus not needing numbers) whereas your points are independent (thus needing numbers). — keystone
You mentioned that a rational number, which is a point, can also be considered as nested stacks of intervals, essentially an arbitrarily small line. However, no matter how small that line is, it can never truly be a point. — keystone
No real numbers are isolated.
— fishfry
Interesting. It sounds like you might agree that the best one can do is isolate a small bundle around the real number. What is the length of such a bundle - positive rational? Zero? Ever shrinking? — keystone
We don't need to discuss supertasks. They're not relevant to either of our positions. — keystone
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